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Alex Ovechkin Ties Wayne Gretzky's All-Time NHL Goalscoring Record with No. 894

Julia Stumbaugh
Apr 4, 2025
Chicago Blackhawks v Washington Capitals

Alex Ovechkin has tied Wayne Gretzky for the most goals in NHL history.

Ovechkin scored career goals 893 and 894 on Friday night against the Chicago Blackhawks.

The goals marked Ovechkin's 40th and 41st of the season in what has been a historically dominant age-39 campaign.

Gretzky was 38 when he scored his record 894th goal on March 29, 1999 during his 20th and final NHL season with the New York Rangers.

It took Gretzky 1,479 regular season games to set a standard previously seen as untouchable. Ovechkin tied the record in the 1,486th regular season game of his career.

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Gretzky's record hinged on an unprecedented run of dominance with the 1980s Edmonton Oilers. He became the first and only NHL player to score more than 90 goals in a season in 1982 and topped 70 goals in each of his next three campaigns.

Gretzky's goalscoring rate then dropped off later in his career. He scored nine goals in 70 games during his final NHL season.

Ovechkin, who played through some of the lowest-scoring seasons in modern NHL history, hasn't topped 60 goals in a single season since 2008.

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Although Gretzky's goalscoring peaks will remain uncontested, Ovechkin's consistency has been unmatched. Outside of the shortened 2020-21 campaign, Ovechkin hasn't scored fewer than 30 goals in a season since entering the league in 2007.

Ovechkin hit the 30-goal milestone for a record 19th time during his age-39 campaign this season, despite missing over a month of play after suffering a fractured fibula in November.

The Capitals captain will now get the chance to break Gretzky's record in short order.

Washington's next game is scheduled for Sunday against the New York Islanders.

Alex Ovechkin Breaking Wayne Gretzky's Goal Record Shows Nothing Is Impossible

Lyle Fitzsimmons
Apr 4, 2025
NHL: APR 06 Capitals at Islanders
Alex Ovechkin celebrates the record-breaking goal

Wayne Gretzky, to fans of a certain age, was a perpetual source of astonishment.

He reached Canada’s hockey radar as a 10-year-old. He had 110 points in the old WHA during the season in which he turned 18. And by the time he was 21, let’s just say he was pushing things to a place no one had imagined, let alone seen.

Well, he’s not so alone in the stratosphere anymore.

When Alex Ovechkin beat New York Islanders netminder Ilya Sorokin with a power-play wrist shot from the top of the left face-off circle to get to 895 and officially nudge Gretzky off the top line of the all-time list, it was the pinnacle (for now) of a two-decade journey that began when he arrived from Moscow as the top overall pick in 2004.

"I could tell you first hand how hard it is to get to 894," Gretzky said at the post-goal celebration at center ice in UBS Arena on Sunday. "So 895 is pretty special."

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Ovechkin spoke broken English and was a 20-year-old fish out of water when he got started in the U.S. capital, but anyone who knew a hockey stick from a pretzel stick could tell he was exceptional.

Maybe it was his willingness to mix it up. Maybe it was a wicked one-timer that, even in primordial stages, was lethal. Or maybe it was the sheer giddiness he got from playing.

A Calder Trophy and the predictable run of All-Star nods and other hardware followed.

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And by the time he finished his fifth NHL season and had already amassed 269 goals—an annual average of nearly 54—perhaps the most optimistic Capitals fan may have whispered among friends that he’d someday make a run at Gretzky’s high-water mark.

But it still seemed so far away.

Because Gretzky finished his career in 1999 with 894 goals. Which, at the time, was 93 more than the No. 2 man on the list, Gordie Howe, who’d played in nearly 300 more games.

Let that sink in for a Ruthian minute. That’s 93 more goals than a guy called ā€œMr. Hockeyā€ in what amounts to three-and-a-half fewer seasons.

So it was no wonder, as a 38-year-old Gretzky left Madison Square Garden that spring and made post-retirement rounds in Edmonton a few months later, that no one in their right statistical minds anticipated it’d be a conversation we’d have again.

Ex-teammate Mark Messier was the next-nearest active player at the time, and he was 284 goals behind and already running on fumes on a career that ended in 2004.

For a player to even approach the record—let’s say, to get as far as Howe had gone—he’d have to average 40 goals per season for 20 years, in a league where scoring 40 even a handful of times provides fast-track consideration for the Hall of Fame.

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Forget kind of doubtful or even highly unlikely.

This was full-on impossible. Or, if you prefer, IMPOSSIBLE.

And given the nightly pounding Ovechkin put his body through—yielding averages of 206 hits and 31 blocked shots per season—it was a reach to think he’d be much more than a bruised, battered husk by the time he got within legitimate conversational distance.

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Gretzky, who was no physical force, was hardly the player at 38 that he’d been at 18 or 28, missing 35 games in 1992-93 after back surgery and never scoring more than 25 goals after a 38-goal, 130-point last stand with Los Angeles in 1993-94.

And Howe, though a marvel for playing effectively into his 50s, scored in the 20s and teens more often (six times) than not across his final nine NHL seasons, earning his eventual place in history as much by high-end longevity as high-end production.

The Russian machine, though, has (almost) never broken.

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Ovechkin has been just as remarkable for his durability as his production, playing in no fewer than 72 games in any of his first 19 seasons, outside of schedules impacted by labor strife (2012-13) or COVID-19 (2019-20, 2020-21).

He scored no fewer than 31 goals in any full season and arrived this fall having passed Howe for second place. Ironically, his first major injury occurred as the Gretzky chase kicked into gear, coming when he fractured his left leg in a collision with Utah’s Jack McBain in November.

It’s a season-wrecker for many. Ovechkin missed a month.

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And just to remind folks who they were dealing with, he scored four times in his first five games back and hadn’t stopped—netting at least one in 23 of 42 post-injury games through Saturday.

In fact, this record-breaking season had already been among the best of his career, with 41 goals in 60 games translating to a per-game rate of 0.683—still within reasonable distance of 2007-08 and 2008-09, when he was a youngster at 22 and 23 years old, respectively, and averaged .752 over 161 games.

These days, in case you didn’t know, he’s 39.

It’s translated to the bigger picture, too, helping Washington to both the league’s best record and genuine love from DraftKings, which ranks its title chances second only to defending champion Florida in the East.

Given that the Caps were swept last spring, and their offseason moves, while prudent, were hardly transcendent, it’d be easy to tag the 2024-25 ascension with words like surprising, unexpected and even remarkable, regardless of when it ends.

Still, even if you’re not sold on a deep run for them, we’ll go ahead and bet there’s now one specific word you’ll think twice about using for as long as Ovechkin is involved.

Go ahead. We dare you.

Anthony Duclair Taking 'Time Off' from Islanders After Roy Ripped 'God-Awful' Effort

Doric Sam
Apr 3, 2025
Columbus Blue Jackets v New York Islanders

After New York Islanders winger Anthony Duclair was ripped by head coach Patrick Roy for showing "god-awful" effort in Tuesday night's loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning, he won't be on the ice for a while.

Roy told reporters on Thursday that he and Duclair had "a very good conversation" in which the 29-year-old asked to "take some time off and reflect." The team agreed to "give him all the time that he needs."

Duclair spent long stretches on the bench and finished with just 12:15 of ice time in Tuesday's loss, and Roy didn't hold back his thoughts after the game.

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"He was god-awful. He was god-awful. He had a bad game. That's why I didn't play him a lot. And he's lucky to be in the lineup. Sorry if I lose it on him right now, but that's how I feel," Roy said, per ESPN's Greg Wyshynski.

When asked why Duclair's ice time was cut, Roy said it was "an effort thing" and added: "He's not skating. He's not competing. He's not moving his feet. He's not playing up to what we expect from him."

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An 11-year veteran, Duclair is in his first season with the Islanders. In 44 games, he has recorded seven goals and four assists for 11 points, well below his typical level of production.

Perhaps some time away from the ice can help Duclair get back on track. The Islanders (32-32-10) must start building momentum to stay alive in the race for a wild-card spot.

Updated 2025 NHL Playoff Picture as Hurricanes, Maple Leafs Clinch Bracket Spots

Andrew Peters
Apr 2, 2025
Bleacher Report

Two more teams have punched their ticket to the postseason.

The Carolina Hurricanes and Toronto Maple Leafs clinched playoff berths on Wednesday. The Hurricanes earned a spot after beating the Washington Capitals while the Maple Leafs clinched with their win over the Florida Panthers.

With two more teams now postseason bound, here's a look at the updated standings and playoff picture.

Western Conference

Pacific Division

  1. Vegas Golden Knights: 45-21-8 (98 points; clinched playoff berth)
  2. Los Angeles Kings: 42-23-9 (93 points)
  3. Edmonton Oilers: 43-26-5 (91 points)
  4. Calgary Flames: 35-27-12 (82 points)
  5. Vancouver Canucks: 34-27-13 (81 points)
  6. Anaheim Ducks: 33-33-8 (74 points)
  7. Seattle Kraken: 31-38-6 (68 points; eliminated)
  8. San Jose Sharks: 20-44-10 (50 points; eliminated)

Central Division

  1. Winnipeg Jets: 51-20-4 (106 points; clinched playoff berth)
  2. Dallas Stars: 49-21-4 (102 points; clinched playoff berth)
  3. Colorado Avalanche: 45-26-4 (94 points)
  4. Minnesota Wild: 41-28-7 (89 points)
  5. St. Louis Blues: 41-28-7
  6. Utah Hockey Club: 34-29-12 (80 points)
  7. Nashville Predators: 27-40-8 (62 points; eliminated)
  8. Chicago Blackhawks: 21-44-9 (51 points; eliminated)

Wild Card

  1. Minnesota Wild: 41-28-7 (89 points)
  2. St. Louis Blues: 41-28-7 (89 points)
  3. Calgary Flames: 35-27-12 (82 points)
  4. Vancouver Canucks: 34-27-13 (81 points)
  5. Utah Hockey Club: 34-29-12 (80 points)
  6. Anaheim Ducks: 33-33-8 (74 points)
  7. Seattle Kraken: 31-38-6 (68 points; eliminated)
  8. Nashville Predators: 27-40-8 (62 points; eliminated)
  9. Chicago Blackhawks: 21-44-9 (51 points; eliminated)
  10. San Jose Sharks: 20-44-10 (50) points; eliminated)

Eastern Conference

Atlantic Division

  1. Toronto Maple Leafs: 45-25-4 (94 points; clinched playoff berth)
  2. Tampa Bay Lightning: 44-25-5 (93 points)
  3. Florida Panthers: 44-26-4 (92 points)
  4. Ottawa Senators: 39-29-6 (84 points)
  5. Montreal Canadiens: 35-30-9 (79 points)
  6. Detroit Red Wings: 34-33-7 (75 points)
  7. Buffalo Sabres: 32-36-6 (70 points)
  8. Boston Bruins: 30-36-9 (69 points)

Metropolitan

  1. Washington Capitals: 48-18-9 (105 points; clinched playoff berth)
  2. Carolina Hurricanes: 46-24-4 (96 points; clinched playoff berth)
  3. New Jersey Devils: 40-29-7 (87 points)
  4. New York Rangers: 36-32-7 (79 points)
  5. Columbus Blue Jackets: 34-30-9 (77 points)
  6. New York Islanders: 32-32-10 (74 points)
  7. Pittsburgh Penguins: 30-34-11 (71 points)
  8. Philadelphia Flyers: 31-36-9 (71 points)

Wild Card

  1. Ottawa Senators: 39-29-6 (84 points)
  2. Montreal Canadiens: 35-30-9 (79 points)
  3. New York Rangers: 36-32-7 (79 points)
  4. Columbus Blue Jackets: 34-30-9 (77 points)
  5. Detroit Red Wings: 34-33-7 (75 points)
  6. New York Islanders: 32-32-10 (74 points)
  7. Pittsburgh Penguins: 30-34-11 (71 points)
  8. Philadelphia Flyers: 31-36-9 (71 points)
  9. Buffalo Sabres: 32-36-6 (70 points)
  10. Boston Bruins: 30-36-9 (69 points)

The Hurricanes have grown quite familiar with the Stanley Cup Playoffs after missing the postseason for nine consecutive seasons from 2010 to 2018. Carolina has now been to the postseason six consecutive seasons with this year making it seven.

As good as the Hurricanes have been during the regular season, they haven't been able to get over the hump to reach the Stanley Cup Final. The closest they've come in recent years was when they advanced to the conference finals in 2023, but they lost to the Florida Panthers in four games.

Carolina boasts a solid offense this year, collecting the seventh-most goals per game (3.26) and have performed well on defense too, allowing just 2.66 goals per game, the eighth fewest in the NHL.

Those numbers have been good enough to get into the playoffs, but they'll need to step things up to make a deep run.

The Maple Leafs have also put together a strong playoff streak, reaching the postseason for nine consecutive seasons now. Still, Toronto is looking for its first Stanley Cup Final win since 1967.

The Maple Leafs have a top-10 offense, scoring 3.26 goals per game, but a middling defense that has allowed 2.93 goals per contest. Whether Toronto's offense can make up for a subpar defense in the postseason will be the question this postseason.